The last mile issue has plagued ISPs since the advent of the Internet. While projects like Google Fiber can deliver massive bandwidth to your door, they require the installation of an entirely new network infrastructure. Not so with the new G.fast standard. It delivers fiber optic speeds over existing telephone lines.

Older iterations of DSL technology were able to provide broadband connectivity through existing telephone lines thanks to a special modulation technique that allowed voice and data to share the same wire at different frequency ranges—DSL at 25 to 1104 KHz and voice between 30 Hz to 4 KHz. However there is only so much signal a single twisted copper cable can carry. This limits the current standard, VDSL2, to just 100 Mbps over a bandwidth of 30 MHz, though you'll be hard pressed to find an ISP that actually offers these speeds.

G.fast, on the other hand, uses a much larger 106 Mhz section of bandwidth to deliver speeds up to 1Gbps—the same as Google Fiber. The new standard is not perfect, though, as its upper frequency range overlaps with the FM radio spectrum, which can cause interference. Plus its wide frequency range generates a large amount of cross-talk between the bundled wires themselves. And, like VDSL2 before it, ISP's could potentially cut the maximum available speed in half to just 500 Mbps due to financial and technical constraints. Still, even at half capacity G.fast is 5 times quicker than its predecessors.

The G.fast standard is expected to be finalized some time next year and could begin rolling out to everywhere Google Fiber and Verizon Fios aren't by the start of 2016. Don't ditch your land line just yet. [Extreme Tech - Huawei - Image: ULKASTUDIO]